Victoria County History

Epping Introduction and manors EPPING Epping was an ancient parish of 5,319 a., lying about 17 miles north-east of London and adjoining Waltham Holy Cross to the east. 1 It comprised the hamlets of Epping Upland , in the

1821 and another house built on its site by John Fiott, 36 lord of the manor of Totteridge . Copped Hall COPPED HALL in this parish is perhaps identical with a capital messuage held in the 16th century by one

Epping Economic history and local government ECONOMIC HISTORY. The three Epping manors mentioned in Domesday clearly do not account for the whole of the ancient parish, and it is suggested elsewhere that the great manor of Waltham , held

Waltham Holy Cross Economic history and local government ECONOMIC HISTORY. According to its legendary history Waltham was only a 'mean hunting lodge' before Tofig founded the shrine about 1040. 1 This is misleading. Although the town probably arose as

Waltham Holy Cross Introduction and manors WALTHAM HOLY CROSS The parish and urban district of Waltham Holy Cross is about 15 miles north-east of London . The western boundary follows the River Lea , which divides the parish from

British History Online

Sugar Sugar. IV. 2. Letter from the Board of Green Cloth to the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen. Upon complaint made to the Board of the bardness and ill-condition of the sugar supplied to His Majesty's house, they

Henry VIII September 1535, 26-30 September 1535, 26-30 [26 Sept.? ] R. O. 441 . Sir Thomas Audeley to Cromwell. On Friday last I sent, as commanded, Grenefeld, the King's serjeantat-arms, with a commission under the King's seal, which

British Newspapers 1600-1900

THE LITERARY EXAMINER. The Playfellow. No. I. The Settlers at Home. No. II. The Prince and the Peasant. By Harriet Martineau. 2 vols. Charles Knight. Miss Martineau is here a welcome labourer in a too scantily cultivated field. Great

POLITICAL AND SOCIAL. IS THERE A LIBERAL PARTY? A ridiculous and humiliating spectacle has been acted before us during the past few weeks; the spectacle of a leader refusing to lead, and a party incapable of being led. The

WNDON CORRESPONDENCE I Lo-Dox, Thursday Night TE division this afternoon upon the first clause of the Licenses Bill, in which the Ministerial majority was only four, was in every sense a surprise. The Conservatives had issued a whip rve

_£itils atiß Bequests. The will aud codicil of the Right Hon. Robert Camp- bell Scarlett, Baron Abinger, of Abuiger Hall, near Dorking, Surrey, where be died on the 24th of June last, aired sixty-six, were administered to by his

View of façade at Copped Hall, Conyers, Essex; seen in perspective, figures on horseback and a carriage on the road which leads past the house, deer on the sloping ground at leftWatercolour, over graphite

148 REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONERS [County of Walthamstow. The sermons required by Maynard's Will are preached by the vicar, and his */r T"7n. Â Will is read in the church on the 27th of November, the day of his

Watford. The Earl and Countess of Bedford's Almshouses, &c. continued. Dame Elizabeth Russell's Charity for a Lecturer. 262 REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONERS [County of vated by the almswomen themselves, or let at small rents by them for their own

"Wilts.] FDR INQUIRING CONCERNING CHARITIES. 493 to John H. Penruddo.cke, e$*q\, dated March 1826, for three lives ; rent, 5d. ; Wilton with fine for only two lives, 10 /. Pitchampton. &urdcott.Âl6. A tenement in Hurdcott, in the parish

346 REPORT OP TEU3 .COMMISSIONERS FOR [County of ÂCobham. the. college, but not otherwise ; and the like-as, to the widow of an impptent husband.; als.0 as, : to.such as (being unmarried at the time of their admission) should

Filth's Charity, continued. Elkin's Charity. Heard's Charity. 718 REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONERS FOR [County of Rainham. m South Would, to the intent that prayers should be- read, and a sermon preached on every Ascension-day, and also that the value